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Archaeologists made a moving discovery inside the 2,000-year-old tombs of children in the ancient Greek seaport city of Parion, now in modern-day Turkey. Excavations of several ancient graves revealed a number of children’s toys, which are believed to have been offered as gifts for the dead children to accompany them on their journey to the afterlife.

According to The Daily Sabah , Professor Hasan Kasaoğlu from Atatürk University and director of the excavation works at Parion, located in Turkey’s Çanakkale province, stated that female figurines were discovered in tombs belonging to girls, while male figurines were unearthed in boys’ tombs. Kasaoğlu said that the new findings could provide valuable information about the sociocultural structure of the period. "2,000 years ago girls played with 'Barbie-like' dolls, the same way they do now," Kasaoğlu told The Daily Sabah , adding that despite toys changing drastically throughout the centuries, the need of humans to play and be entertained has remained the same to this day.

The Importance of Toys Throughout the Centuries

Toys have always been an important part of daily life in human settlements and various archaeological finds have proved that repeatedly. As previously reported in a 2015 Ancient Origins article , tiny figurines were discovered in the grave of an infant which, according to archeologists, dates back 4,500 years. One of the theories proposed that the figurines may have been used as rattling toys or charms to ward off evil spirits. The discovery was made on the northwest shore of Lake Itkul in the Minusinsk basin of Russia by researchers of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Khakassian Research Institute of Language, Literature and History.

The remains of the infant were found in a birchbark cradle, a fact that indicated that the child was less than one-year-old at the time of death. On the infant’s chest, archaeologists discovered eight miniature horned figurines representing human-like characters and heads of elk, boar, birds and an unknown carnivore. The figurines were carved from deer antlers and painted with red ochre. Some of them, according to the researchers, had internal cavities and could produce sounds like modern rattles.

Furthermore, in 2016 Natalia Klimczak reported for Ancient Origins , the discovery of an early Bronze Age toy equivalent to the modern rattle at the Acemhöyük excavation site in Yeşilova, Aksaray. The unique artifact shed some light on children and daily life in ancient times.

The toy was sealed but had tiny ornaments and small pebble stones inside, while archaeologists were surprised to find that it can still produce a noise when the rattle is shaken. The toy is shaped like a ball and it used to have a handle which may have helped the child or an adult to shake it. It is made of terra-cotta and was discovered in a layer dated back to 2200 BC.

The Bronze Age rattle discovered at the Acemhöyük excavation site in Turkey. Source: GTU Gazeturka.com

Figurines Depicting Animals and Mythological Figures Also Unearthed

Fast forward to 2017, Dr. Kasaoğlu noted that the human figurines weren’t the only ones the archaeologists discovered at the site. Figurines depicting animals and Greek mythological creatures were also discovered in the tombs. Interestingly, earlier in September, excavators also discovered a baby bottle at the site.

Founded in 709 BC, the ancient city of Parion (also known as Parium) was a Greek colony that belonged to the Delian League . During the Hellenistic period it came under the domain of Lysimachus, and subsequently the Attalid dynasty . In Roman times, it was a Roman settlement, within the province of Asia. After that province was divided in the 4th century, it was in the province of Hellespontus. The ancient coinage of Parium is quite abundant, attesting to its great output and advanced mint (in Hellenistic times, the city's badge shown on coins was the Gorgoneion). Archaeologists have been carrying out excavations at the ancient site since 2005, unearthing several sarcophagi and graves, as well as ancient artifacts in the area.

Theodoros

Theodoros Karasavvas J D -M A has a cum laude degree in Law from the University of Athens a Masters Degree in Legal History from the University of Pisa and a First Certificate in English from Cambridge University When called... Read More

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